OPINION
MICHELLE
COTTLE
OPINION
MICHELLE
COTTLE
Stop Whining, Mr. Santos. You Got a Fair Shake.
Dec. 1,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/01/opinion/george-santos-expulsion.html
Michelle
Cottle
By Michelle
Cottle
Ms. Cottle
is a domestic correspondent for Opinion and a host of “Matter of Opinion.”
Before we
wallow in the downfall of George Santos, allow me a toast of appreciation to
the freshly defrocked lawmaker and his fellow lawmakers. It takes a lot to get
booted from the House by one’s colleagues, but the New York Republican really
applied himself. And while his 11 very weird months in office were a stain on
American democracy, here’s hoping his departure serves to reassure a
politically disillusioned nation that there is a level of deception, corruption
and lunacy too extra even for Congress. It is a nice reminder that, on special
occasions, most lawmakers still know how to do the right thing.
Now to the
wallowing! It was frustrating for many Americans, including some prominent
Republicans, that it took so long to rid the House of this egregious fraudster,
fabulist and — if that sizzling report from the House Ethics Committee is any
indication — future felon. The Ethics Committee opened its investigation in
March. In May, the congressman was indicted on 13 federal charges, including
fraud and money laundering. In October, 10 more charges were piled on. And
still the House failed twice to expel Santos. Even on this third try, on
Friday, several of his colleagues stuck by him — including all five top members
of Republican leadership. (Nice moral compass, eh?)
But here’s
the thing: The process played out as it should. When expulsion is on the table,
lawmakers are wise to chart a steady, methodical, small-c conservative path.
There’s a reason Mr. Santos is only the third member voted off the island since
the Civil War. Lawmakers are not above the law and should be expected to uphold
high ethical standards. (Stop laughing!) But it is largely up to their
constituents to hold them accountable.
Only in the
most egregious cases should other lawmakers move to superimpose their will over
that of voters, and even then only after due process. Without clear triggers —
such as a criminal conviction or a meticulous report by a bipartisan committee
tasked with such matters — the temptation to wield expulsion like a partisan
weapon would become overwhelming. I mean, it’s bad enough that Marjorie Taylor
Greene has taken to filing articles of impeachment against anyone who looks at
her funny.
There has
been much talk about Republicans’ hesitation to remove Mr. Santos for partisan
reasons. But the delay in rooting him out didn’t split cleanly along party
lines. New York Republicans wanted the guy gone worse than anyone. And several
Democrats were among those blocking earlier expulsion efforts. Among them was
the Maryland Democrat Jamie Raskin, a constitutional professor and lawyer, who
reasoned, “This would be a terrible precedent to set, expelling people who have
not been convicted of a crime and without internal due process.”
He’s not
wrong. Consider the 13 Republicans who filed an expulsion resolution in October
against Representative Jamaal Bowman, the New York Democrat accused of falsely
pulling a fire alarm in the Capitol to delay a House vote. (He pleaded guilty
to a misdemeanor after initially claiming he was trying to open a nearby door.)
Was this partisan nonsense? Yes, it was. But partisan nonsense is increasingly
the norm in Congress — the more offensively nonsensical the better, as some of
the professional disrupters see it.
Once the
Ethics Committee’s report detonated, Mr. Raskin boarded the expulsion train,
along with several other previously reluctant colleagues.
Through the
years, there have been failed and abandoned attempts to oust lawmakers over all
sorts of issues — including being a leader in the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints. (See: Senator Reed Smoot, 1907.) My favorite: In 1856,
Representative Preston Brooks, a South Carolina Democrat, resigned rather than
face an expulsion vote for beating Senator Charles Sumner, a Massachusetts
Republican, with a cane. South Carolina voters promptly re-elected him.
In 2021, a
gaggle of Democrats backed a resolution to expel Ms. Greene over social-media
activity from her pre-Congress days, in which she spread gross conspiracy
theories and seemed to advocate violence against Democratic officials. That
effort went nowhere. Which is probably a good thing. When it comes to lawmakers
saying terrible things, before or after election, there is an awful lot of
subjectivity as to what might qualify as expulsion worthy.
Indeed, Mr.
Santos is a world-class liar. But it seems unlikely the House would have moved
against him if his deception had not allegedly veered into serious criminality.
Lying, hate speech, unhinged behavior — such sins may get a lawmaker censured,
reprimanded or kicked off committees. But the bar for expulsion should remain
higher and clearer.
As it
stands, Mr. Santos’s case was subjected to a lower bar than those of the
House’s two most recent past congressmen who were expelled: Jim Traficant in
2002 and Michael Myers in 1980. In both those cases, House lawmakers waited to
act until after their scandal-ridden colleagues had been convicted in court — a
distinction about which Mr. Santos and his defenders have been whining loudly.
On
Thursday, the eve of his expulsion vote, he called a news conference to snivel
about unfairness and announce that he was introducing his own expulsion
resolution against Mr. Bowman. “Let’s talk about consistency,” huffed Mr.
Santos.
Consistency?
To quote the great Inigo Montoya, I don’t think that word means what Mr. Santos
thinks it means.
Any
suggestion that this has been a rush to judgment is absurd. The House has a
well-established bipartisan, deliberative process for investigating allegations
of impropriety. And the report on Mr. Santos that the Ethics Committee adopted
— unanimously — was a loo-loo, laying out the Botox and OnlyFans details of
what the investigators termed “serious and pervasive campaign finance
violations and fraudulent activity.”
In holding
Mr. Santos accountable, the House proceeded with extreme caution, waiting for
the results of a formal investigation. Although none of us should breathe too
easy. Shamelessness is a prerequisite for lawmakers in this position.
(Otherwise, they’d have the decency to resign and spare the nation the
spectacle.) And it’s worth remembering that, after being expelled on an even
more resounding vote of 420 to 1, Jim Traficant stood for re-election a few
months later. From prison. And received 15 percent of the vote.
Democracy
is messy. It’s supposed to be. Enjoy the wins when you can.
.
Michelle
Cottle is a domestic correspondent in Opinion and a host of “Matter of
Opinion.” She has covered Washington and politics since the Clinton
administration.
@mcottle
Dec. 1,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/01/opinion/george-santos-expulsion.html
Michelle
Cottle
By Michelle
Cottle
Ms. Cottle
is a domestic correspondent for Opinion and a host of “Matter of Opinion.”
Before we
wallow in the downfall of George Santos, allow me a toast of appreciation to
the freshly defrocked lawmaker and his fellow lawmakers. It takes a lot to get
booted from the House by one’s colleagues, but the New York Republican really
applied himself. And while his 11 very weird months in office were a stain on
American democracy, here’s hoping his departure serves to reassure a
politically disillusioned nation that there is a level of deception, corruption
and lunacy too extra even for Congress. It is a nice reminder that, on special
occasions, most lawmakers still know how to do the right thing.
Now to the
wallowing! It was frustrating for many Americans, including some prominent
Republicans, that it took so long to rid the House of this egregious fraudster,
fabulist and — if that sizzling report from the House Ethics Committee is any
indication — future felon. The Ethics Committee opened its investigation in
March. In May, the congressman was indicted on 13 federal charges, including
fraud and money laundering. In October, 10 more charges were piled on. And
still the House failed twice to expel Santos. Even on this third try, on
Friday, several of his colleagues stuck by him — including all five top members
of Republican leadership. (Nice moral compass, eh?)
But here’s
the thing: The process played out as it should. When expulsion is on the table,
lawmakers are wise to chart a steady, methodical, small-c conservative path.
There’s a reason Mr. Santos is only the third member voted off the island since
the Civil War. Lawmakers are not above the law and should be expected to uphold
high ethical standards. (Stop laughing!) But it is largely up to their
constituents to hold them accountable.
Only in the
most egregious cases should other lawmakers move to superimpose their will over
that of voters, and even then only after due process. Without clear triggers —
such as a criminal conviction or a meticulous report by a bipartisan committee
tasked with such matters — the temptation to wield expulsion like a partisan
weapon would become overwhelming. I mean, it’s bad enough that Marjorie Taylor
Greene has taken to filing articles of impeachment against anyone who looks at
her funny.
There has
been much talk about Republicans’ hesitation to remove Mr. Santos for partisan
reasons. But the delay in rooting him out didn’t split cleanly along party
lines. New York Republicans wanted the guy gone worse than anyone. And several
Democrats were among those blocking earlier expulsion efforts. Among them was
the Maryland Democrat Jamie Raskin, a constitutional professor and lawyer, who
reasoned, “This would be a terrible precedent to set, expelling people who have
not been convicted of a crime and without internal due process.”
He’s not
wrong. Consider the 13 Republicans who filed an expulsion resolution in October
against Representative Jamaal Bowman, the New York Democrat accused of falsely
pulling a fire alarm in the Capitol to delay a House vote. (He pleaded guilty
to a misdemeanor after initially claiming he was trying to open a nearby door.)
Was this partisan nonsense? Yes, it was. But partisan nonsense is increasingly
the norm in Congress — the more offensively nonsensical the better, as some of
the professional disrupters see it.
Once the
Ethics Committee’s report detonated, Mr. Raskin boarded the expulsion train,
along with several other previously reluctant colleagues.
Through the
years, there have been failed and abandoned attempts to oust lawmakers over all
sorts of issues — including being a leader in the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints. (See: Senator Reed Smoot, 1907.) My favorite: In 1856,
Representative Preston Brooks, a South Carolina Democrat, resigned rather than
face an expulsion vote for beating Senator Charles Sumner, a Massachusetts
Republican, with a cane. South Carolina voters promptly re-elected him.
In 2021, a
gaggle of Democrats backed a resolution to expel Ms. Greene over social-media
activity from her pre-Congress days, in which she spread gross conspiracy
theories and seemed to advocate violence against Democratic officials. That
effort went nowhere. Which is probably a good thing. When it comes to lawmakers
saying terrible things, before or after election, there is an awful lot of
subjectivity as to what might qualify as expulsion worthy.
Indeed, Mr.
Santos is a world-class liar. But it seems unlikely the House would have moved
against him if his deception had not allegedly veered into serious criminality.
Lying, hate speech, unhinged behavior — such sins may get a lawmaker censured,
reprimanded or kicked off committees. But the bar for expulsion should remain
higher and clearer.
As it
stands, Mr. Santos’s case was subjected to a lower bar than those of the
House’s two most recent past congressmen who were expelled: Jim Traficant in
2002 and Michael Myers in 1980. In both those cases, House lawmakers waited to
act until after their scandal-ridden colleagues had been convicted in court — a
distinction about which Mr. Santos and his defenders have been whining loudly.
On
Thursday, the eve of his expulsion vote, he called a news conference to snivel
about unfairness and announce that he was introducing his own expulsion
resolution against Mr. Bowman. “Let’s talk about consistency,” huffed Mr.
Santos.
Consistency?
To quote the great Inigo Montoya, I don’t think that word means what Mr. Santos
thinks it means.
Any
suggestion that this has been a rush to judgment is absurd. The House has a
well-established bipartisan, deliberative process for investigating allegations
of impropriety. And the report on Mr. Santos that the Ethics Committee adopted
— unanimously — was a loo-loo, laying out the Botox and OnlyFans details of
what the investigators termed “serious and pervasive campaign finance
violations and fraudulent activity.”
In holding
Mr. Santos accountable, the House proceeded with extreme caution, waiting for
the results of a formal investigation. Although none of us should breathe too
easy. Shamelessness is a prerequisite for lawmakers in this position.
(Otherwise, they’d have the decency to resign and spare the nation the
spectacle.) And it’s worth remembering that, after being expelled on an even
more resounding vote of 420 to 1, Jim Traficant stood for re-election a few
months later. From prison. And received 15 percent of the vote.
Democracy
is messy. It’s supposed to be. Enjoy the wins when you can.
.
Michelle
Cottle is a domestic correspondent in Opinion and a host of “Matter of
Opinion.” She has covered Washington and politics since the Clinton
administration.
@mcottle


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